work wrote: » I believe a huge protest against the popes visit is required to show the government and church they are no longer welcome or wanted in our society. What do you think? There are many stakeholders that should protest their removal from any influence in our society. Some that come to mind are: 1) Anyone not supportive of misogyny 2) Anyone that doesn't believe in school indoctrination of children in a massive lie. 3) Anyone concerned about abusers in positions allowing abuse 4) Anyone with the most basic scientific education. 5) Anyone that doesn't support cults 6) Anyone that believes LGBT people should be treated fairly in society. 7) Anyone that believes women should have ANY control of their bodies. 8) Anyone that is not seen as equal in the church namely women children and men. There are many other areas but I realised I have covered everyone. As such let's all go to the Phoenix park to let the Vatican know they are not welcome. Are there any peaceful groups planning to protest?
Leroy42 wrote: » The left love to protest? I take it you've never seen a protest outside an abortion clinic?
work wrote: » The church has done untold damage to the people of this Island. I started this thread as I would like to see them out of our state funded schools.
Grab All Association wrote: » Works too You can also insert Judaism, Protestant, Presbyterian etc into that post. Why not protest against all religions.
An_Toirpin wrote: » Protesting at the Pope visiting is like protesting a Gay Pride event.
Deleted User wrote: » In other words, people in the Irish state who want that RCC property need to put up the money for those properties, or whisht. Barring a communist takeover, it really is that simple.
martyc5674 wrote: » Not at all comparable. The Pope is the leader of a misogynistic group, not to mention the wake of harm it has left in its path in the schools. I can understand why some would protest his visit.
AllForIt wrote: » Anyone who has a problem with religion, on the whole, never object to one having a religious belief but rather the way it was forced on our society. That is going going gone now and I have no problem with the Pope coming to Ireland. I wont be paying any attention - just like the football world cup.
doolox wrote: » I would subscribe to a religious practice only in so much that it gets my kids into the right schools. gets my family and relatives into the right jobs and keeps the zealots from ruining my life. Sacraments and other outward signs of religious identity used to be needed to get into schools, get married in a church to keep the wife happy or other life milestones. There is no other practical benefit to religion.
AllForIt wrote: » I think it's interesting that the volume of ppl at events in Knock and Dublin are capped due to 'health and safety reasons'. Did anyone die in 1979 due to a stampede? It's not like the ppl going there are the same demographic as those attending a rock concert. To me it's an attempt to disguise the fact that there wouldn't be anywhere near the volume of ppl who turned up in.
AllForIt wrote: » I think it's interesting that the volume of ppl at events in Knock and Dublin are capped due to 'health and safety reasons'. Did anyone die in 1979 due to a stampede? It's not like the ppl going there are the same demographic as those attending a rock concert. To me it's an attempt to disguise the fact that there wouldn't be anywhere near the volume of ppl who turned up in 1979.
Leroy42 wrote: » This fluffy, caring church is only a recent phenomenon in Ireland, and welcome as that is, let us not pretend that it was by choice or by some enlightenment. They were forced to change by the sheer weight of scandals against them. Only recently we had the church arguing that canon law takes precedence of the law of the state! But the church has not only stood by but actively protected and covered up institutional rape of children. They have forced mothers to give up their babies for no other reason than it was against their moral code. They have undertaken beatings in schools. This is the institution that in the past have allowed things like the Spanish Inquisition and the witch trials. Sure it was in the past but even now they are covering up abuse and telling people in Africa not to use condemns, not because they don't believe they work, but it again goes against the code. And people think we should welcome what it essentially a PR and recruitment drive to Ireland? Have the church dealt with the Tuam scandal? Have they gone back and dealt with all past clerical pare and abuse? Have they dealt with the mothers from the Magdalene Laundries? Have they opened up their records to deal with the babies removed from their mothers and given up for adoption in the US? Its is great if it hasn't effected you personally, but it severely damaged the lives of thousands of people. People that have been forced to endure being portrayed as liars when they tried to tell their story, defended at every turn by the church more worried about itself and its assets than the person they had wronged. Eventually it comes out that not only did the abuse happen, but the church knew about it at the time and knew that person was telling the truth, yet allowed them to relive the orderal to try to save themselves.
Graces7 wrote: » . Albatross And yes I am an abuse survivor but have decided/chosen to walk on and leave the past, and yes to forgive, and that is a choice as is your choice to let that dead bird hang around your neck and weigh you down. I walk in the Light and support many survivors.
Leroy42 wrote: » It not about that. It's about protecting those that come after us.I applaud your ability to forgive, you are a far stronger person that I will ever be. But it is surely irresponsible of the state to forget. To welcome the very same organisation that caused so much hurt and pain with open arms. No one is forgetting. Sorry; cannot read the same things over and over again. No one is forgetting. I was literally sick for three days when Tuam surfaced. And spent hours in the graveyard at Letterfrack. When I first came to ireland, I was commissioned to write a book on the state of the Catholic Church in the early years of the new century This was on the eve of the first scandals breaking and my commission got me entry to places and people few access. I knew and know far more than most. If you do not forgive, then it is YOU you are hurting. Only you You are seeing one side. An unbalanced view. And there is still a strong church here of folk whose faith is not in the Church but in God, in Jesus. Wonderful folk who do so much good. So quietly and who lament what was done. The Pope is a political figure also.A head of state. If you start demoing against heads of state you do not agree with? No one is forgetting. How could we? The State is still trying to decide what to do with the Tuam site and has spent a huge sum getting experts in. That is all they can do. Almost all the Order that ran Tuam are dead and gone. All we can do is pick up the survivors and plan ahead. I am working with that too and have the peace I wish I could give you.. Mind you, there was the day a Christian Buggar...opps! Brother, came to my market stall boasting who he was .... and I fairly lambasted him.
Deleted User wrote: » Whereas he is the representative leader of a faith, that has also provided a lot of good will/behavior to the world. It's not as simple as many people would like to suggest it is. I can certainly understand why many people would welcome his visit, and not be willing to join the mob in their hatred of all things Catholic. I'm agnostic and really don't like religion, of any kind.... but it's done very little harm to me, even though I was raised in a religious household and went to religious schools. I'm not going to rush out in welcome to the Pope, but at the same time, I bear him or the church absolutely no ill will.